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Khelaghor
Khelaghor
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Khelaghor
GenreDrama
Romance
Thriller
Crime
Created byBlues Productions
Developed byBlues Productions
Screenplay bySnehasish Chakraborty
Story bySnehasish Chakraborty
Directed byRanjoy Roy
Creative directorSnehasish Chakraborty
Starring
  • Swikriti Majumder
  • Syed Arefin
Voices ofJoy Bhattacharya
ComposerSnehasish Chakraborty
Country of originIndia
Original languageBengali
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes628
Production
Executive producersRuna & Sudip
(Blues Productions)
Samajita, Arpita & Dipanita
(Star Jalsha)
ProducerSnehasish Chakraborty
Production locationKolkata
CinematographySukanta Baag
EditorsBapon & Sumit
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time22 minutes
Production companyBlues Productions
Original release
NetworkStar Jalsha
Release30 November 2020 (2020-11-30) –
4 September 2022 (2022-09-04)

Khelaghor is a 2020 Indian Bengali language romantic thriller drama television series that premiered on 30 November 2020 on Bengali General Television Entertainment Channel Star Jalsha and it also available on the digital platform Disney+ Hotstar. The show is produced by Snehasish Chakraborty of Blues Productions and stars Swikriti Majumder and Syed Arefin in lead roles. On 8 August 2022, an Odia dubbed version of this show was premiered on Star Kiran. After a successful run of almost two years, the show went off-air on 4 September 2022.

Plot

[edit]

The story involves a rich girl, Purna Chatterjee, who gets accidentally married to an uneducated vagabond Shantu Gunda, a goon living in a slum in a twist of fate. Shantu, once a bright student, Digbijoy Roy, gets jailed for 3 years for a crime he committed accidentally and later gets hired by Gogon Makhal, the leader of a local political party. Purna is the daughter of Justice Barun Chatterjee, the judge responsible for Shantu's imprisonment. Born and brought up conservatively, she never thought of meeting a man and falling in love with him, thus agreeing for an arranged marriage with Ritam. Shantu, on the other hand applies sindoor on Purna's forehead in a fit of rage just to prove his point about marriage, but he later regrets it. Though shocked and distraught at first, Purna leaves Ritam on the very ritual whereas Ritam supports Purna and says he loves her irrespective of the accidental sindur which is not really a marriage by law. But Purna forcefully enters the slum as a newly wed bride, much to the chagrin of her father as well as Shantu. Ritam continues to love her but Purna ignores him and keeps chasing Shantu, who is also loved secretly by his childhood friend Radha. However, destiny makes many events occur in the life of Shantu and Purna which eventually make them both gets close to each other.[1]

Cast

[edit]

Main

[edit]
  • Swikriti Majumder[2] as Purna Chatterjee Roy – Barun and Somdatta's elder daughter; Arna's sister; Rana, Baishali, Riya, Nandini and Gargi's cousin; Shantu's wife
  • Syed Arefin[3] as Digbijoy "Shantu" Roy – Sarbojit and Panchali's youngest son; Ranjit and Ajit's brother; Purna's husband

Recurring

[edit]
  • Sohan Bandyopadhyay as Justice Barun Chatterjee – Kiranmala and Tarun's brother; Somdatta's husband; Purna and Arna's father
  • Dolon Roy as Somdatta Chatterjee – Barun's wife; Purna and Arna's mother
  • Shuvangshee Dutta as Arna Chatterjee – Barun and Somdatta's younger daughter; Purna's sister; Rana, Baishali, Riya, Nandini and Gargi's cousin
  • Subhasish Mukherjee as Sarbojit Roy – Panchali's husband; Ranjit, Ajit and Shantu's father
  • Mousumi Saha as Panchali Roy – Sarbojit's wife; Ranjit, Ajit and Shantu's mother
  • Jayanta Dutta Barman as Ranjit Roy – Sarbojit and Panchali's eldest son; Ajit and Shantu's brother; Swati's husband
  • Bulbuli Panja as Swati Roy – Ranjit's wife
  • Sounak Ray[4] as IPS Ritam Mukherjee – Partha's son; Purna's ex-fiancé
  • Manishankar Banerjee as Partha Pratim Mukherjee – Ritam's father
  • Biplab Bandyopadhyay as Moundip – Shantu's professor
  • Sneha Das as Radha – Shantu's childhood friend and lover; Ravi's love interest
  • Tapasi Roy Chowdhury as Kiranmala Chatterjee Ganguly – Barun and Tarun's sister
  • Sudipa Basu as Aloka Chatterjee – Kiranmala, Barun and Tarun's sister-in-law
  • Rana Mitra as Tarun Chatterjee – Kiranmala and Barun's brother; Meghna's husband
  • Meghna Halder as Meghna Chatterjee – Tarun's wife
  • Dipanjan Jack Bhattacharya as Rana Chatterjee – Purna, Arna, Baishali, Riya, Nandini and Gargi's cousin; Bonnie's husband
  • Mousumi Bhattacharya as Bonnie Chatterjee – Rana's wife
  • Sukanya Chatterjee as Baishali, Purna's eldest cousin
  • Ankita Brahma as Riya, Purna's cousin
  • Nondini Roy as Nondini, Purna's cousin
  • Gargi Mukherjee as Gargi, Purna's youngest cousin
  • Sankar Sanku Chakraborty as Gogon Makhal- a corrupt politician, Purna and Shantu's rival
  • Surajit Sen as Bobin goon, Shantu's Rival
  • Priyantika Karmakar as Gauri Makhal- Gogon's sister
  • Judhajit Banerjee as Badal Singh
  • Roosha Chatterjee as Roosha Chatterjee
  • Ashim Mukherjee as Roosha's father

Adaptations

[edit]
Language Title Original release Network(s) Last aired Notes Ref.
Bengali Khelaghor
খেলাঘর
30 November 2020 Star Jalsha 4 September 2022 Original
Tamil Thendral Vandhu Ennai Thodum
தென்றல் வந்து என்னை தொடும்
16 August 2021 Star Vijay 11 February 2023 Remake [5]
Kannada Neenadena
ನೀನಾದೇನಾ
16 May 2023 Star Suvarna Ongoing [6]
Malayalam Pavithram
പവിത്രം
16 December 2024 Asianet
Telugu Nuvvunte Naa Jathaga Star Maa [7]

Reception

[edit]

Ratings

[edit]
Week Year BARC Viewership Ref.
TRP Rank
Week 51 2020 5.1 4 [8]
Week 52 2020 5.4 5 [9]
Week 1 2021 5.1 4 [10]
Week 2 2021 5.0 5 [11]
Week 3 2021 4.8 4 [12]
Week 4 2021 4.9 4 [13]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Khelaghor is an Indian Bengali-language romantic drama television series that premiered on 30 November 2020 on the channel. Produced by Snehasish Chakraborty under Blues Productions, it stars Syed Arefin alongside debutante Swikriti Majumdar in the lead roles. The plot centers on a wealthy young woman who accidentally enters into a with an uneducated vagabond residing in a , forcing the couple to navigate significant social and personal adjustments in their relationship. The series, noted for its exploration of class disparities and romantic development, achieved popularity and led to a Kannada-language featuring Kushi Shivu and Dileep Shetty.

Production and Development

Concept and Creation

Khelaghor was conceived by Blues Productions, a Kolkata-based company founded in 2006 by Snehasish and Debashish Chakraborty, as an original Bengali-language series. The core idea centered on the suspenseful ramifications of an unforeseen between protagonists from starkly contrasting social strata—a highly educated, principled young woman and a local goon perceived as socially marginal—aiming to dissect class tensions through dramatic interpersonal conflicts rather than idealized resolutions. Produced under Snehasish Chakraborty's oversight, the series integrated thriller mechanics with romantic developments to highlight causal frictions in cross-class unions, eschewing tropes that glamorize economic hardship in favor of grounded portrayals of adjustment and power imbalances. This approach echoed longstanding Bengali literary and dramatic traditions of fate-mediated pairings and societal navigation, adapted for serialized television to sustain viewer engagement over an extended run. The program debuted on , a leading Bengali general entertainment channel, on 30 November 2020, structured as a daily serial to facilitate ongoing narrative escalation. It comprised 628 episodes broadcast over nearly two years, concluding in early 2022, which enabled progressive unfolding of the thriller's stakes without premature resolution.

Filming and Broadcast

Khelaghor was produced by Blues Productions, a Kolkata-based established in 2006 and led by Snehasish Chakraborty. The series was filmed primarily in , utilizing locations such as urban neighborhoods and slum areas to emphasize the narrative's grounded portrayal of social dynamics. Cinematography was handled by Sukanta Baag, employing a multi-camera setup typical for daily soap operas, with episodes running approximately 22 minutes each. The serial premiered on on 30 November 2020, airing weekdays in the evening time slot, initially around 6:00 PM before shifting to 5:00 PM from February 2022. It concluded on 4 2022, having surpassed 500 episodes by April 2022, aligning with the extended format common in Bengali television serials that often exceed 300 installments. Production encountered logistical challenges amid the , as Kolkata's television industry halted shootings during lockdowns and resumed in June 2020 under strict and health protocols mandated by authorities. These measures, including limited crew sizes and testing requirements, delayed and influenced on-set operations for serials like Khelaghor, though specific disruptions to its timeline remain undocumented beyond industry-wide patterns.

Cast Selection

Swikriti Majumder was cast as the affluent heiress Purna Roy, representing her debut in Bengali television after a background in modeling. Syed Arefin, selected for the contrasting role of the uneducated slum-dweller Digbijoy Roy (also known as Shantu), brought prior experience from lead roles in serials such as (2018), where he starred opposite . The production emphasized for class authenticity, pairing Majumder's fresh persona with Arefin's established versatility in dramatic roles to underscore the narrative's social divide between privilege and poverty. Recurring family members and antagonists were filled by seasoned performers, including as Somdatta Chatterjee and as Sarbojit Roy, whose extensive Bengali TV credits lent realism to the ensemble dynamics. Sounak Ray, portraying a negative character, had appeared in supporting parts in prior shows like and Mangal Chandi. No verifiable reports of casting controversies or mid-production changes emerged during the show's development or run, which premiered on December 7, 2020, on . The selections aligned with producer Snehasish Chakraborty's vision for Blues Productions, focusing on actors capable of embodying the thriller-romance elements without prior overlaps in similar lead pairings.

Synopsis and Characters

Plot Summary

Khelaghor centers on the accidental marriage of Purna Chatterjee, a highly educated woman from a wealthy family headed by Justice Barun , to Shantu, an uneducated man from the slums with a background as a local goon. This union occurs despite Purna's prior arrangement to marry Ritam, thrusting the protagonists into a relationship marked by profound class disparities and cultural clashes. The narrative unfolds through phases of intense initial conflict, as family opposition and societal pressures exacerbate the couple's incompatibilities, including Shantu's rough past—stemming from wrongful and involvement with local criminals—and Purna's privileged upbringing. Domestic adjustments demand significant compromises, highlighting economic and educational barriers that realistically hinder harmony rather than yielding to unexamined romantic ideals. Thriller elements emerge from external threats and internal struggles, propelling character development as the pair confronts opposition from Purna's family and Shantu's slum environment, testing the viability of their bond amid persistent . The storyline progresses chronologically from clash to tentative adaptation and evolving dynamics, without resolving into simplistic triumphs over structural divides.

Main Characters

Purna serves as the female protagonist, depicted as a highly educated individual from a wealthy whose life intersects with contrasting social strata through an accidental . Her role highlights the tensions between inherited privilege and personal adaptation, with motivations rooted in familial obligations and the pursuit of amid class expectations. Digbijoy Roy, operating under the alias Shantu, functions as the male lead, portrayed as a street-smart figure who transitioned to a vagabond existence after wrongful for a crime he did not commit. Initially appearing uneducated and aligned with local criminal elements after being hired by a don named Gogon Makhal post-release, Shantu's character embodies survival-driven ingenuity and underlying intelligence obscured by circumstances. His development underscores pragmatic responses to adversity, prioritizing over abstract ideals. Supporting figures include Purna's parents, Justice Barun and Somdatta , who reinforce class-based norms through their actions, reflecting self-interested maintenance of social standing rather than unconditional support. These familial antagonists prioritize reputational integrity, illustrating how entrenched hierarchies foster resistance to outsider integration, grounded in observable patterns of status preservation in stratified societies. The interplay among characters reveals archetypes of wealth-driven rigidity versus necessity-forged flexibility, with relational evolutions driven by enforced proximity and mutual reliance rather than spontaneous altruism.

Reception

Viewership and Ratings

Khelaghor garnered solid viewership on , entering the top five among Bengali serials in early 2022 amid competition from leading shows like Mithai and . The series sustained strong TRP performance throughout its run, enabling it to surpass 500 episodes by April 2022. Airing in the 6:00 PM slot, it appealed primarily to family audiences in , where daily serials dominate evening viewership, though specific demographic breakdowns from BARC data remain unavailable in public reports. Its thriller elements and lead pairing of Syed Arefin and Swikriti Majumder helped maintain engagement against rivals, contributing to consistent ratings rather than fleeting peaks. Cross-border appeal in was anecdotal, driven by shared linguistic ties, but unquantified in official metrics.

Critical Analysis

Khelaghor's thriller elements, centered on the accidental between a privileged woman and a slum-dwelling vagabond, generate suspense through interpersonal conflicts and forced adaptations, contributing to its appeal as escapist entertainment in the romantic drama genre. This setup effectively builds tension around mismatched social backgrounds, with the female protagonist's relocation to impoverished surroundings underscoring raw class frictions without overt romanticization of . However, the series draws criticism for melodramatic resolutions that prioritize emotional over nuanced development, a common trope in Bengali television where socioeconomic barriers yield to improbable reconciliations and personal epiphanies. Review aggregations reflect this , with average scores indicating that while sustains viewer interest, portrayals of upward mobility for underprivileged characters often appear simplistic, relying on dependency dynamics rather than sustained agency or . Such narrative choices, while engaging for mass audiences, limit deeper causal exploration of class entrenchment, favoring formulaic triumphs that align with commercial serial conventions.

Adaptations and Legacy

Remakes and International Versions

The Tamil-language adaptation, titled , premiered on on August 16, 2021, and aired until February 11, 2023, spanning over 600 episodes. This official remake retained the core narrative of Khelaghor, centering on an affluent young woman compelled into marriage with a man from a lower socioeconomic background due to unforeseen circumstances, while incorporating Tamil cultural elements such as regional family dynamics and linguistic idioms. The lead roles were portrayed by Pavithra Janani and Vinoth Babu, diverging from the original Bengali cast of Swikriti Majumdar and Syed Arefin to feature local actors suited to Tamil audiences. In , the series was remade as Neenadena, which premiered on May 16, 2023, on a regional channel, drawing directly from Khelaghor's premise of class disparity and accidental union but adapted with Karnataka-specific social contexts, including references to local traditions and dialogue. The production featured new casting aligned with Kannada television conventions, emphasizing fidelity to the thriller-romance elements while modifying character backstories for regional relevance. The version, Pavithram, launched on Asianet on December 16, 2024, airing weekdays at 9 PM, and follows the original's plot of a privileged protagonist's life-altering to an underprivileged counterpart, with adjustments for Kerala's , such as family structures influenced by matrilineal traditions in certain communities. Starring and Sreekanth Sasikumar in the principal roles, it replaces the Bengali leads with performers familiar to viewers, preserving key causal events like the accidental wedding while localizing attire, rituals, and interpersonal conflicts. A Telugu adaptation, Nuvvunte Naa Jathagaa, was announced as an official remake for in November , targeting and audiences with the familiar trope of contrasting social classes united by fate, tailored through Telugu-specific naming conventions and familial expectations. As of late , it entered production with a new , maintaining the thriller aspects of intrigue and romance from Khelaghor but incorporating regional Andhra cultural nuances in plot resolutions and character motivations. No non-Indian international versions have been produced, limiting expansions to South Asian regional linguistic markets.

Cultural Impact

Khelaghor's depiction of a evolving into a transformative romance between an affluent, educated and a slum-dwelling goon highlighted persistent class divides in Bengali society, where familial consent and socioeconomic compatibility remain central to marital expectations. The narrative's focus on the 's role in reforming her husband's rough edges through persistence and affection reinforced conservative ideals of spousal duty and family-mediated social upliftment, resonating with viewers accustomed to similar dynamics in traditional households. This trope of redemptive inter-class love, central to the series' "instant hit" status and praised lead chemistry, has echoed in broader Bengali media discourse on the limits of romantic against entrenched family hierarchies. While not sparking documented policy or behavioral shifts, the show's sustained appeal—evidenced by surpassing 500 episodes in April 2022—suggests it amplified viewer reflections on marital realism, favoring resolutions that prioritize relational adaptation over radical social upheaval.

References

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